TURNING UP THE BBBEE AND EMPLOYMENT EQUITY HEAT ON WHITE-OWNED BUSINESSES
The recently published BEE codes and the Employment Equity Amendment Bill (EEAB) can be undestood only within the context of the ANC's overarching National Democratic Revolution (NDR) and its ideology of demographic representivity (DR).
According to the ANC's 2007 Strategy and Tactics document "A critical element of the programme for national emancipation should be the elimination of apartheid property relations." This would require, inter alia, "the de-racialisation of ownership and control of wealth, including land"; and "equity and affirmative action in the provision of skills and access to positions of management".
No reasonable person would question the need for effective measures to promote and advance black South Africans in the economy, to increase the number of black business owners and to develop black human resources and skills. This process should proceed rapidly, naturally and organically until black South Africans assume their rightful place in the economy on the basis of merit and accomplishment.
However, the BEE/EE process goes much further. The goal toward which the Government is working is the imposition of DR in the private sector in the same manner as it has been imposed in the public sector. According to Minister Rob Davies:
"Black economic empowerment is not just a social and political imperative. We need to make sure that in the country's economy, control, ownership and leadership are reflective of the demographics of the society in the same way the political space does. That's why we are saying BEE remains an economic imperative. We cannot expect to grow and develop as a country if the leadership of the economy is still in the hands of only a small minority of the society."